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WITH ITS 200TH BUILD, DUG CONTINUES TO HELP
COMMUNITIES GROW AND SHARE FOOD. PAGE 6
COLORADO
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EXPAND SELFSUFFICIENCY
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PAGE 5
FREEDOM FROM
DOMESTIC
VIOLENCE:
WOMAN WRITES ABOUT
ESCAPING FROM HER ABUSIVE
MARRIAGE OF 29 YEARS.
PAGE 8
NEW MIGRANTS
REMAIN HOPEFUL
DESPITE
CHALLENGES
DENVER VOICE CONTRIBUTOR
GILES CLASEN DOCUMENTS
HIS INTERACTIONS WITH
NEW IMMIGRANTS.
PAGE 10
VOICES OF
OUR COMMUNITY
PAGES 3, 10, 11, 12
EVENTS / PUZZLES
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RESOURCES
PAGE 15
MARCH 2024 | Vol.29 Issue 3
SINCE 1997, WE HAVE PROVIDED AN OPPORTUNITY FOR THOUSANDS OF PEOPLE TO WORK. DONATE TODAY TO ENSURE OUR VENDORS CONTINUE TO HAVE JOBS. (DENVERVOICE.ORG)
FROM YOUR VENDOR:
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ELISABETH MONAGHAN
MANAGING EDITOR
IT SEEMS I WAS JUST WISHING FOLKS
A HAPPY NEW YEAR, and now, I am
writing this column that will wrap
up the first quarter of 2024. That’s
probably why I appreciate the twopart
question Raelene Johnson
suggested for this month’s Ask a
Vendor, “How is your 2024 going
so far? What is something you’re
hoping for between now and the
end of the year?”
For those who set New Year’s
seem so
resolutions,
those goals
possible early in the year, but once everything is in motion, it
can be difficult to keep up with goals for better health, a more
positive outlook on life, or taking up hobbies — especially
when we didn’t have much time for these goals before we set
them. To anyone who remains committed to meeting their
resolutions for 2024, congratulations! To folks who haven’t
been able to follow through on their resolutions, give yourself
a break. Maybe you can set an easier goal to meet over the
remainder of the year.
Speaking of Raelene Johnson, if you’ve read the series of
Self talks she’s written over the past few years, you’re familiar
with her words of encouragement. Based on overcoming drug
addiction, finding stable housing, and discovering that her
relationship with God and her Self make a difference in how
she approaches life, Raelene is an inspiration. As you will read
in her latest update, 2024 did not begin well for Raelene. Not
only did her rent go up significantly, but she was diagnosed
with cancer. She also recently learned that a separate medical
issue required surgery, which would interrupt her chemo
treatments. Add to that, she totaled her car in early February.
Despite these setbacks, Raelene remains hopeful. We miss
seeing her at the office, and no doubt, her regular customers
miss seeing her vend on the Pearl Street Mall, but until she can
return to vending, she will stay in touch through her updates. ■
THIS MONTH’S
CONTRIBUTORS
GILES CLASEN is a freelance photojournalist
who regularly contributes his work to the
VOICE for editorial projects, fundraisers,
and events. He has also served on
the VOICE’s Board of Directors.
ROBERT DAVIS is an award-winning
freelance reporter for the Denver VOICE.
His work has also appeared in Colorado
Newsline, Business Insider, Westword,
the Colorado Sun, and Medium.com.
GRACE THORBURN is a journalism student
at the University of Colorado Boulder.
She hopes that her writing will make a
difference in the community by covering
social justice issues such as LGBTQ+
rights, homelessness, and racial equity.
DENVERVOICE.ORG
E.ORG
@deeOCE
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
James Kay
MANAGING EDITOR
Elisabeth Monaghan
PROGRAM COORDINATOR
Connie Gaitan
GRAPHIC DESIGNER
Hannah Bragg
VOLUNTEER COPY EDITORS
Lanie Lee Cook
Aaron Sullivan
ARTISTS/PHOTOGRAPHERS
Giles Clasen
Gigi Galen
WHAT WE DO
The Denver VOICE empowers homeless, impoverished, and
transient individuals by creating job opportunities through
our vendor program. We give our vendors a job and help
them tell their stories; this creates a space for them to be part
of a community again.
Vendors purchase copies of the VOICE for 50 cents each
at our distribution center. This money pays for a portion
of our production costs. Vendors can buy as many papers
as they want; they then sell those papers to the public for
a suggested $2 donation. The difference in cost ($1.50) is
theirs to keep.
WHO WE ARE
The Denver VOICE is a nonprofit that publishes a monthly
street newspaper. Our vendors are men and women in the
Denver metro area experiencing homelessness and poverty.
Since 2007, we have put more than 4,600 vendors to work.
Our mission is to facilitate a dialogue addressing the roots
of homelessness by telling stories of people whose lives
are impacted by poverty and homelessness and to offer
economic, educational, and empowerment opportunities
for the impoverished community.
We are an award-winning publication, a member of the
International Network of Street Papers and the Colorado
Press Association, and we abide by the Society of
Professional Journalists code of ethics.
With the money they make selling the VOICE, vendors are
able to pay for their basic needs. Our program provides
vendors with an immediate income and a support group
of dedicated staff members and volunteers. Vendors are
independent contractors who receive no base pay.
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT editor@denvervoice.org
VENDOR PROGRAM program@denvervoice.org • (720) 320-2155
ADVERTISING ads@denvervoice.org
MAILING ADDRESS PO Box 1931, Denver CO 80201
VENDOR OFFICE 989 Santa Fe Drive, Denver, CO 80204
OFFICE HOURS: Monday through Friday, from 9 a.m. until 2 p.m.
Orientation is held every day we are open, but
prospective vendors must arrive by 10:00 a.m.
WRITERS
Lando Allen
Giles Clasen
Robert Davis
Raelene Johnson
Jerry Rosen
Grace Thorburn
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Chris Boulanger, Vice President
Jeff Cuneo, President
Zephyr Wilkins, Secretary
Antonio Diaz, Treasurer
Michael Burkley
Cassandria Carmouche
Robert Davis
Nikki Lawson
Julia Watson
Cabal Yarne
2 DENVER VOICE March 2024
STAFF
CONTRIBUTORS
BOARD
CONTACT US
׉	 7cassandra://NzMHVoKqheRK-pM5Dr915AUoseRRFgkXaiWMSKMzcAY#` eҍ*D׉EASK A VENDOR
THIS COLUMN IS A PLACE FOR DENVER VOICE VENDORS TO RESPOND TO QUESTIONS FROM OUR READERS AND STAFF.
THIS MONTH’S QUESTION WAS SUGGESTED BY DENVER VOICE VENDOR RAELENE JOHNSON.
Q
A
How is your 2024 going so far? What is something you’re hoping for between now and the end of the year?
LANDO ALLEN
The beginning of the year has been a nightmare for me. My camper got towed. I
tried to get a painting sold but didn’t. I wanted to get some fliers done on my
paintings, and I failed at that. I was doing too much. I was working for a friend who
cheated me out of money, and the sad thing about it is he knew about all of the
stuff I was going through. People!
I don’t want to play the victim. My main goal is to get things on track, like doing my
music, getting more and better paintings done, and moving out of state. I already
did one thing. I bought a camper, and this time, I’m going to pay for parking and
not make the same mistake [I did with my old camper]. I will need to finish the rest
of the goals I set for this year.
RAELENE JOHNSON
The first half of the year is going to be dealing with surgery and cancer. In the
second half of the year, I hope to have nothing but happiness and good health!
JERRY ROSEN
2024 is going very well for me, as I’m accomplishing some of my goals. I have
received some miracles so far with finances and a few other things. I hope for
better health and better things for the coming year.
HOW TO HELP
The money we take in from vendors helps us cover a portion
of our printing costs, but we depend largely on donations
from individuals, businesses, and foundations to help us pay
our rent and keep the lights on.
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You can also mail a check to:
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Go to denvervoice.org/subscriptions for more information.
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March 2024 DENVER VOICE 3
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 
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use algorithms to judge whether you are a beer person or a
wine person to send you targeted offers.
Every online payment transaction is assessed by an AI in real
time to decide whether it could be fraudulent. If you’ve ever
tried to buy something and ended up triggering an additional
security measure – be it a password prompt or request for
authentication on a mobile app – your bank’s AI was judging
your attempted transaction as abnormal or suspect.
Our research shows that abundant AI capacity is available
to make judgments on whether people’s behavior is deviant
or abnormal. To return to our opening example, in a world
where early retirement is not the norm, an early retiree has
the scales tipped against them.
Such social sorting, carried out by AI-based judgments,
could be interpreted as a latent or soft form of majoritarian
gerrymandering.
Traditional gerrymandering is the unethical practice of
redrawing electoral district boundaries to skew electoral
outcomes. AI-based social
sorting could disenfranchise
people for behaving in a way that deviates from the majority.
The patterns in the Wisconsin case should have us
concerned that voters from ethnic minority backgrounds
were systematically being classified as deviating from
cultural norms.
WHO GETS A VOTE?
In an ideal world, the electoral roll would include all eligible
voters and exclude all ineligible voters. Clean voter lists are
vital for democracy.
Having ineligible voters lurking on lists opens the
PHOTO COURTESY OF RED DOT
HOW AI COULD
DISENFRANCHISE VOTERS
BY DEEPAK PADMANABHAN, MUIRIS MACCARTHAIGH, AND STANLEY SIMOES
IMAGINE: THE YEAR IS 2029. You have been living at the same
address for a decade. The postman, who knows you well,
smiles as he walks to your door and hands you a bunch
of letters. As you sift through them, one card grabs your
attention. It says: “Let us know if you are still here.”
It’s an election year and the card from the electoral office
is asking you to confirm that you are still a resident at the
same address. It has a deadline, and you may be purged from
the voter list if you don’t respond to it.
You read about the government using AI to detect and
eliminate electoral fraud through selective querying. Is it
the AI pointing fingers at you? A quick check reveals that
your neighbors haven’t received any such cards. You feel
singled out and insecure. Why have you been asked to prove
that you live where you’ve lived for so long?
Let’s look under the hood. You received the card because
election officials had deployed an AI system that can
triangulate evidence to estimate why some voters should be
contacted to check whether they are still residents at their
address. It profiles voters based on whether they display the
behavior of a “typical” resident.
In this case, you had taken early retirement and not
filed tax returns in the past few years, and you had been
on holiday during the previous election in 2024. These
actions led the AI to conclude that you could be lingering
on the electoral list illegitimately and triggered the system
to contact you.
This fictional story is more plausible than you might
think. In 2017 and 2018, more than 340,000 Wisconsin
residents received a letter asking them to confirm if they
needed to remain on the voter list.
This was at
the behest of a US-wide organization
called Eric, which had classified these voters as “movers” –
those who may have ceased to be residents. Eric used data on
voting history to identify movers – but also administrative
data such as driving license and post office records.
Eric may not have used any sophisticated AI, but the logic
it employed is very much the kind of logic that an AI would
be expected to apply, only on a much larger scale.
The approach seemed highly effective. Only 2% of people
responded, suggesting that the vast majority of the people
contacted were indeed movers. However, research later
showed systematic demographic patterns among Eric’s
errors. The people erroneously identified as movers (who
ended up showing up to vote) were far more likely to be
from ethnic minorities.
AI AND “MAJORITARIAN GERRYMANDERING”
AI algorithms are used in a variety of real-world settings to
make judgments on human users. Supermarkets routinely
possibility for spurious voting, skewing the result and
damaging electoral integrity. On the other hand, leaving
eligible voters off a list disenfranchises them and could result
in election results that don’t reflect the true will of the people.
Ensuring access to the franchise to every eligible voter is
therefore very important, and efforts towards clean voter
lists need to spread their focus reasonably between integrity
and access.
The question, therefore, becomes whether AI is capable
of doing this. As it stands today, AI is fundamentally a datadriven
technology – one that is adept at looking at existing
data and identifying regularities or irregularities.
It is much better equipped to spot issues with existing
data than to identify instances of missing data. That means
that it is good at identifying people who may have moved
from their registered address, but not good at identifying
new residents who have not registered to vote.
In a world of AI-driven electoral cleansing, you are much
more likely to receive a “Are you still here?” card than your
new neighbor is likely to receive a “Have you considered
registering to vote?” card.
What this means for using AI to clean up voter lists is
stark. It risks skewing the balance towards checking for
integrity and away from enabling access.
Integrity-focused efforts in essence involve pointing
fingers at people and putting the onus on them to confirm
that they are legitimate voters. Access-focused efforts are
like a welcoming pat on the back – an invitation to be part of
the political process.
Even if widespread disenfranchisement doesn’t happen,
states still risk undermining trust in elections by using AI on
a larger scale. It could lead voters to feel that electoral offices
are obsessively oriented towards fault-finding and much
less interested in democratic inclusion. And at a time when
trust in elections is needed more than ever, that perception
could be just as damaging as actually cutting people from
electoral rolls. ■
Courtesy of The Conversation / INSP.ngo
4 DENVER VOICE March 2024
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SPRING
WISH LIST
Drop-offs are accepted Monday through
Friday, 9 a.m. - 1 p.m., or by appointment.
CREDIT: SIGMUND ON UNSPLASH
COLORADO NONPROFITS
EXPAND SELF-SUFFICIENCY
BENEFITS AS NEED GROWS
BY ROBERT DAVIS
RESIDENTS AT THREE APARTMENT COMPLEXES with subsidized
housing options for people exiting homelessness and those
with Section 8 housing vouchers are now able to access
additional self-sufficiency benefits just as a majority of
renters in the Denver metro area are struggling to afford rent.
In early February, Mercy Housing Mountain Plains, a
nonprofit that offers affordable housing at 17 properties in
Colorado, and the national nonprofit Compass Working
Capital entered into a partnership to administer the federal
Family Self-Sufficiency program. FSS helps connect those
with housing vouchers and public housing residents with
employment opportunities that enable them to “achieve
economic independence and reduce dependence on welfare
assistance and rental subsidies,” according to the U.S.
Department of Housing and Urban Development.
The benefits will be available for residents of the Decatur Place
Apartments at 115 Decatur St. in Denver, the Clare Gardens
at 2626 Osceola St. in Denver, and the Holly Park Apartments
at 5524 East 60th Ave. in Commerce City. All of the apartment
complexes are owned and operated by Mercy Housing.
“Through the efforts of our Resident Services teams and
with the support of Compass Working Capital, our financial
services programming is helping to meet residents where they
are in their financial journeys and allowing them to build a
solid financial foundation,” Mercy Housing Mountain Plains
Resident Shelly Marquez said in a press release.
The new partnership was forged at a time when data
from Harvard’s Joint Center for Housing Studies found
that more than 51% of renters in the metro Denver area
are “cost-burdened,” meaning they pay at least 30% of
their monthly income on rent and utilities. One out of
four renters in metro Denver were also described as being
“severely cost-burdened” because they pay at least 50% of
their income on housing costs.
Denver’s median rent for an apartment was more
than $1,700 per month as of January 2024, according to
ApartmentList.com. This means that renters must earn a
minimum annual salary of $68,000—or about $32.69 per
hour—to avoid being cost-burdened.
However, there are relatively few jobs in the metro area
that pay enough for renter households to comfortably afford
housing. Data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics shows
that the metro area’s median hourly wage is $32.09, which
is 15% above the national average of $28.01. But nearly
two-thirds of jobs available in the metro area pay less than
the average hourly wage and the jobs that do pay enough
require specialized education and licensure like software
engineering, architecture, and legal professions.
Markita Morris-Louis, the chief executive of Compass
Working Capital said state data suggests there are about
28,000 people in Colorado who are receiving rental
assistance and qualify to receive additional FSS benefits.
However, only 800 people participate each year, she said.
Morris-Lewis added that the partnership between
Compass Working Capital and Mercy Housing Mountain
Plains could be a “game changer” for expanding FSS access
in Colorado going forward. ■
@DenverVOICE
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March 2024 DENVER VOICE 5
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PHOTO COURTESY OF FEED MEDIA
FOR 40 YEARS, DUG HAS
HELPED COMMUNITIES
GROW AND SHARE FOOD
BY GRACE THORBURN
BUILDING A GARDEN PLOT FROM THE GROUND UP IN ONE DAY is no
easy feat. Fortunately, the community members who showed
up to Denver Urban Garden’s 200th plot build were willing
to get their hands dirty. DUG, a 40-year-old nonprofit, built
its 200th garden at 48th Avenue & Julian Street in Denver on
October 13, 2023.
Volunteers at the build included DUG community
members, leadership from the Denver Parks and Recreation
Department, and dedicated volunteers from Love, Tito’s,
the vodka brand — who also sponsored the event with food
drinks, and music for volunteers.
As the largest independent network of food-producing
gardens in the United States, DUG’s reinspiring communities
to grow and share food.
All of DUG’s gardens are community-run. Their mission
is to provide access, resources, and skills for communities to
grow food in regenerative urban green spaces. According to
a 2022 survey, 81% of the food that was harvested by DUG
gardeners was donated or shared with others.
PHOTO COURTESY OF FEED MEDIA
PHOTO COURTESY OF FEED MEDIA
6 DENVER VOICE March 2024
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Forty-four new plots were built in 2022, which allowed
space for 176 new community gardens. Come spring, 20 plots
at the 48th & Julian community garden can be utilized for
fresh produce.
The plot where DUG’s most recent garden was built is
city-owned land that had originally been part of Rocky
Mountain Lake Park. It was vacant for about 60 yeaars, due
to construction along I-70, which separated the land from
the park.
“One of the amazing benefits of our partnership that we
have with Denver Urban Gardens is the fact that we identify
opportunities,” said Chief of Staff at Denver Parks and
Recreation Mark Bernstein. “We collectively have that vision
for how we can take underutilized spaces like this parcel here
and sort of reimagine it to have a much greater purpose that
will serve the community.”
The Pecos Community Garden was birthed by four Hmong
families who immigrated to the United States in the late 1970s
and was established as DUG’s first garden in 1978. These
families have stuck together since the beginning to maintain
the garden as a source of fresh food and to hold onto the ageold
tradition of bonding with each other.
On May 3, 2023, when the U.S. Surgeon General Dr. Vivek
Murphy released an advisory calling attention to the public
health crisis of loneliness, isolation, and the lack of connection
in the U.S., DUG’s work became more important than ever.
Even before the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic,
approximately half of U.S. adults reported experiencing
measurable levels of loneliness. According to Dr. Murphy,
loneliness increases our risk of mental health challenges
and premature death, amplifying the need for community
gardens to regenerate the land and increase community
engagement and food access.
Community gardens that take the place of grass “capture
way more carbon, require a lot less water, and the temperature
when you have dense plantings like this [is decreased], so
the heat island effect is reduced, and the biodiversity gets
increased,” said Linda Appel Lipsius, DUG’s CEO. “There are
so many climate benefits, and when you take these times the
200 gardens we have, that’s some serious acreage.” The heat
island effect refers to urbanized areas that experience higher
temperatures than other outlying areas.
DUG supports its gardens in a variety of ways, mainly by
providing approved access to land where communities can
come together to grow food and by coordinating volunteer
groups to help maintain the gardens.
“Increasingly, there are fewer opportunities for you to interact
with your neighbor, and your neighbor is maybe a different age,
PHOTO COURTESY OF FEED MEDIA
background, or socioeconomic status,” said Lipsius. “In these
gardens, people come together who wouldn’t normally have
the opportunity to work together, and it’s a thing of beauty. We
[DUG] think that community is a lost art or skill, and these
[urban community gardens] help bring them back.”
“Having more outdoor space instead of just an open lot
is awesome,” said Carl Keating, a volunteer at DUG’s 200th
garden build, who said he enjoys helping with a community
movement that’s fostering more engagement in the community.
“People might just figure out they have a green thumb.” ■
To apply for a plot at 48th & Julian in Denver, email
i48thandJuliancommunitygarden@dug.org
FOOD FORESTS
TO ADDRESS
FOOD DESERTS
ADJACENT TO THE RECENTLY BUILT COMMUNITY GARDEN is
DUG’s 19th food forest in the metro Denver area. The
freshly planted trees that make up this food forest at 48th
Avenue and Julian Street were planted in September as a
regenerative food source for the community. So, what are
food forests and how do they address food deserts?
Food deserts are exactly what they sound like — places
where affordable produce is hard to come by. The
Etkin Family Food Forest Initiative was launched in
the spring of 2022 to plant accessible
food forests in
small and underutilized areas in both public spaces as
well as alongside community gardens. This initiative
is one of many DUG programs that benefit residents in
underserved communities.
DUG’s food forests are shade-producing and are planted
with water-conscious dryland techniques and are thus
built to thrive in a changing climate. Food forests usually
are made up of seven layers: canopy/tall trees, understory,
shrub, herb, groundcover, root, and vertical climber. Each
food forest in Denver is maintained by at least two “Tree
Keepers” who will ensure the survival and establishment of
these trees and plants. ■
PHOTO COURTESY OF FEED MEDIA
PHOTO COURTESY OF FEED MEDIA
March 2024 DENVER VOICE 7
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Suddenly, a muddled thought flashed through my mind: “My
vaccinations aren’t valid in Germany. What now?”
I stood at the Frankfurt railway station with only €20 in
my pocket. I didn’t see anywhere to warm up until the train
left. The station’s charitable mission was the only place I
could go. The young woman at my table gave me a piece of
chocolate cake.
I felt like a failure then, just like everyone who walks
through those doors. And that’s exactly why I was so grateful
to be there. I knew that I had exchanged the false security
with my violent husband for freedom – but it didn’t seem to
offer me any support.
Loneliness, emotional turmoil, feelings of guilt towards
the children who themselves had suffered so much from his
violence, feelings of guilt towards my entire family. Why did
it take so long to open my eyes? And at the same time, I felt
an almost inexplicable yearning to be with him, to go back
to the old cycle of violence and regret.
PHOTO COURTESY OF AIDA L ON UNSPLASH
FREEDOM FROM DOMESTIC
VIOLENCE: “HOW COULD I
LOSE MYSELF LIKE THAT?”
BY CHRISTIANE ROSENMUTH
I WANTED TO EMIGRATE – to spend my twilight years in my
husband’s home country, which had become my second
home over the course of our 30 years together. But when
the time came, we only managed eight months. Then we
separated, at long last.
For almost 29 years, our marriage was defined by physical
and psychological violence and my husband’s narcissism.
I used to be a teacher. Ever since I was signed off from
therapy and recovered from an operation on my hip, I
have been supporting disabled people and studying social
work. I want to help children and young people learn to
love themselves, acknowledge their
them seriously.
feelings, and take
WE WERE HITTING EACH OTHER, NO LONGER
HOLDING ANYTHING BACK
3 January 2022. It was one of those nights: drunk, stoned,
coked up, and full of Bazooka [a dangerous cocaine paste].
My husband had already snorted it all, and I was pumped
full of alcohol and coke too – it had become the only way to
make it through these nights.
But this night, he was more violent than the others; there
were so many of them in our marriage. I don’t remember
how it happened this time – we were fighting, hitting each
other, no longer holding anything back. I hit back. This is
something I had “learned” in the last few months: to stop
putting up with everything, to stop being scared and silent.
I too had crossed the line, and we were about to go over
the precipice.
Eventually, he fell asleep, and I prayed: “God, if you want
all this to end, let me go without waking him up.” I left. My
packed bag had been waiting for this moment for months.
I grabbed a few more things and headed out into the
8 DENVER VOICE March 2024
dark, with just enough money to pay for the bus to Quito,
the capital of Ecuador. Our daughter, who was 10,000
kilometers away, stayed on the phone with me the whole
time and paid for the first hotel remotely.
THE DECISION TO LEAVE
It would take another two weeks until I could leave behind
my old life of emotional and physical hell. You couldn’t just
up sticks and leave like that. There were documents I needed
to leave the country, and I had forgotten them.
Besides, I couldn’t really let go yet. The few times we met
before I finally left him and the country I’d come to know as
my second home were filled with last-ditch attempts to save
what was no longer savable.
There were fears and threats of death and a final embrace
with my husband that is burned into my mind. It was
perhaps the only embrace in which our souls felt our pain,
our sadness, and also the little love we had left for each other,
for a few minutes in our 30-year marriage.
I was fortunate to have help from some selfless, kind
people, without whom I would not have been able to leave.
AN UNCERTAIN FREEDOM
19 January 2022. Back in the winter in Germany. From the
warm equator to the sub-zero temperatures of Frankfurt. I
had my suitcase and a backpack; nothing else was left from
those 30 years. I didn’t want anything else.
For a long time, the only feelings I had were loneliness,
of having uprooted myself: of not belonging anywhere and
no longer wanting to belong anywhere. Our children had
already given up a long time ago. They couldn’t watch it,
couldn’t stand it anymore.
Quito – Madrid – Frankfurt – Stuttgart. A 40-hour journey.
FINDING YOURSELF AGAIN
The next 18 months led to an inner journey that sometimes
caused just as much terrible pain as my previous life. Inpatient
therapy, facing up to my life, to my failure, to myself.
It wasn’t just the hellish years of my marriage that needed
to be looked at, but mainly the 30 years that preceded them.
I realized that I had drifted through life for 60 years without
any self-worth. I hadn’t learned to recognize, appreciate,
and take myself and my feelings seriously.
Loss
How could I lose myself like that?
Wasn’t I on the right path?
That old fear of not feeling loved
Was stronger and was leading me
onto a dangerous bridge
that broke beneath me
Hope and illusion – two powerful drugs –
until I fell apart
But they carried me through pain and torment
The voice saying stop fell on deaf ears
I haven’t felt like myself for a long time.
STARTING LIFE ANEW
12 September 2023. I have an appointment with a lawyer
in a few days. I’m filing for divorce. And I’m trying to
forgive myself.
The responsibility never lies with just one person. That
will never justify his violence, but I also had my reasons for
staying and maintaining the relationship for so long, and for
not sparing my children the misery much earlier.
I am well on my way to coming to terms with my past
and becoming a part of society again. But it’s not over yet. I
have to slowly nurture a new relationship with my children
and rebuild the trust that we destroyed. It will be a long and
painful process. But I dream of one day sitting down at a
table with them and laughing together warmly, happily.
We have a long way to go, but I know that this moment
will come. That’s what I’m working for, and it will only
happen like this:
When I’ve managed
To overcome all my fears
To find myself and appreciate her
To no longer walk in his footsteps
But rather follow my heart.
When his blood no longer flows in my veins
only then will I be free
and we can talk again
3 November 2023. I no longer need him to know who I am. ■
Translated from German by Sarah G Robinson
Courtesy of Trott-war / INSP.ngo
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TOLEDO’S JAZZ
LEGACY: THE
BLACK MUSICIANS
WHO SHAPED
THE OHIO CITY’S
SOUNDSCAPE
BY ANGELA JENNINGS
ART TATUM. ILLUSTRATION COURTESY OF TOLEDO STREETS / INSP.NGO
ART TATUM
A name synonymous with virtuosic, Art Tatum took jazz
pianism by the reigns and flipped it upside down. He took
inspiration not only from jazz’s primary melodic aspects, but
those that weren’t and still aren’t typically focused on, such as
bass lines and percussive elements.
He approached musicianship from an innovative different
angle and was truly a force to be reckoned with. Local jazz
expert Doug Swiatecki highlighted that Tatum’s “unbeatable
piano stylings were developed in Toledo,” rather than after his
introduction to more mainstream jazz communities in New
York and Chicago.
“When he left Toledo, he overwhelmed all of the pianists in
New York,” added Swiatecki. “Going forward, every jazz
pianist in history, no matter how creative they are, stands in
the shadow of what Tatum did.”
CLAUDE BLACK
Although he did not share Tatum’s level of recognition,
Claude Black was a true icon among Toledo’s most influential
jazz pianists. After leaving Detroit, rather than choosing to
move to New York, Black chose Toledo – a testament to his
love for the city.
According to Swiatecki, he was well respected and liked
among his peers, and had a wide range of rich experiences
with jazz greats. He was Aretha Franklin’s original keyboard
player, and “talked about going to New York and jamming
with all these famous guys, and the likes of Billie Holiday.”
Kim Buehler of Toledo School for the Arts worked
with Black directly and describes him as one of her biggest
JEAN HOLDEN. COURTESY OF JEANHOLDEN.COM
influences as a young jazz artist. “Claude Black could instruct
you with just one eyebrow,” she said. “If you did something
that he really liked he would kind of sit up and look at you,
and you were like, ‘I did it, he looked at me!’”
CLIFFORD MURPHY
Clifford Murphy is recognized nationwide for his work as a
jazz bassist. Both Swiatecki and Buehler credit the blossoming
of Toledo’s jazz scene to the opening of jazz club Murphy’s
Place, which he co-ran with his partner Joan Russell, who
took charge while he travelled with his band.
Murphy “brought a level of jazz musicianship into
downtown Toledo that hadn’t been there since the late 40s or
50s,” said Swiatecki.
JEAN HOLDEN
A truly versatile entertainer, Jean Holden is widely considered
one of the most important vocalists in Toledo to this day. “In
terms of jazz, she can turn it on with the best jazz vocalist you
can name and stand her ground,” said Swiatecki.
With her vast knowledge of many other musical genres,
such as blues and country, Holden has also worked as a vocal
coach, and “the list and the names of people that have come
out of her vocal studio is kind of staggering,” Swiatecki added.
JON HENDRICKS
Having grown up just down the street from Art Tatum, Jon
Hendricks was destined to make an impact not only on a
CLAUDE BLACK. COURTESY OF THE UNIVERSITY OF TOLEDO
RAMONA COLLINS. COURTESY OF RAMONACOLLINS.COM
March 2024 DENVER VOICE 9
RAMONA COLLINS
Widely known as “Toledo’s hardest working vocalist,” Ramona
Collins paved the way for the area’s female performers and
vocalists.
Buehler is one of the many young women who Collins
mentored throughout her career. She described Collins as “a
great mentor to her about how to be a woman in the industry.
To this day, I still gig with her, and she does not take a break.”
“I don’t
think she suffers
fools, and that’s
refreshing,”
Swiatecki added. “I’ve watched her adapt to the most
professional orchestras and the most inexperienced players.
She is such a vibrant person and a great advocate for all things
jazz in Toledo.” ■
Courtesy of Toledo Streets / INSP.ngo
local but on an international scale. With his invention of
Vocalese, a style of jazz involving writing lyrics to songs or
compositions that are typically instrumental, Hendricks
made groundbreaking strides in his career.
For
four semesters, Buehler was Hendricks’
teaching
assistant at the University of Toledo, which gifted her the
opportunity to tour and perform with him in Europe.
She described him as possessing great kindness. “Whether
it was a person on a corner, a person passing him in the
airport, the garbage man, or somebody really famous, he
treated everybody the same,” she said. “He treated every
person as if they were a king.”
“I’m certain that Jon was truly one of the titans in the
American jazz pantheon,” said Swiatecki.
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ON WARMER DAYS FAMILIES GATHER IN PARKING LOTS IN FRONT OF THEIR HOTELS. CREDIT: GILES CLASEN
NEW MIGRANTS
REMAIN HOPEFUL
DESPITE CHALLENGES
BY GILES CLASEN
THE CITY OF DENVER has served nearly 40,000 new immigrants
often by offering shelter in hotels. New immigrant families
were allowed to spend up to 42 days in a hotel before being
released, while single men and women were often housed
for up to 14 days. Denver sheltered 5,205 individuals at the
peak of service on January 11, 2024. Since then, the number
of individuals sheltered in hotels has decreased significantly.
The long wait for a work permit has left many struggling
to earn a living. Those who are unable to work have often
turned to living in homeless encampments once they lose
the city’s shelter.
Since I began volunteering at new immigrant camps
around Denver, there are three things I’ve noticed among
most of the new immigrant communities:
1. Most of the new immigrants I have met participated
in CBPOne [U.S. Customs and Border Protection]
appointments before entering the United States.
ONE ENCAMPMENT WAS FORCED TO RELOCATE MULTIPLE TIMES AFTER
POLICE WARNED OF EMINENT SWEEPS. CREDIT: GILES CLASEN
10 DENVER VOICE March 2024
ONE ENCAMPMENT WAS FORCED TO RELOCATE MULTIPLE TIMES AFTER
POLICE WARNED OF EMINENT SWEEPS. CREDIT: GILES CLASEN
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NEW MIGRANTS FEEL A MIX OF EXHAUSTION AND HOPE AS THEY
END UP LIVING ON THE STREETS. CREDIT: GILES CLASEN
VOLUNTEERS AND NEW IMMIGRANTS MOVE A CAMP LATE INTO
THE NIGHT BEFORE A SWEEP. CREDIT: GILES CLASEN
THOUSANDS OF OF NEW MIGRANTS ARE RELEASED FROM HOTELS,
INCLUDING CHILDREN. CREDIT: GILES CLASEN
NEW MIGRANTS MOVE INTO ENCAMPMENT SWEPT EARLIER IN THE WEEK. CREDIT: GILES CLASEN
They crossed the border legally and are scheduled for
immigration hearings, which in time, will determine
their eligibility to remain in the U.S.
2. Almost everyone I’ve spoken with wants to work. Every
day, I receive several texts and messages from new
immigrants through WhatsApp, asking how they can
find jobs.
3. Despite living on the streets and in tents, the majority
of the new migrants are thrilled to be in the U.S. One
person told me that even though they live in a tent,
they are in a better situation than when they were
in Venezuela. In Venezuela, they had they had little
opportunity and no hope that their circumstances
would change. In Denver, individuals and families are
looking past their short-term struggles and are hopeful
for future opportunities and success for themselves and
their families. ■
VOLUNTEERS AND NEW IMMIGRANTS MOVE A CAMP LATE INTO
THE NIGHT BEFORE A SWEEP. CREDIT: GILES CLASEN
NEW MIGRANTS FEEL A MIX OF EXHAUSTION AND HOPE AS THEY
END UP LIVING ON THE STREETS. CREDIT: GILES CLASEN
March 2024 DENVER VOICE 11
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GOING THROUGH CANCER
BY RAELENE JOHNSON, VOICE VENDOR
ACCEPTING MY BALDNESS
Today, I had to come to terms with losing my hair.
The first few days after chemo treatment was hard. Then,
10 days later, my hair started to fall out. I couldn’t watch it
fall out slowly. It hurt my heart. I had to come to terms with
losing my hair. ALL OF MY HAIR. I had grown my hair to
about 10 inches long. From that to no hair was hard to take.
People put a high value on hair, but cancer said, “Surprise!
You will go into this New Year BALD!”
I found out that Great Cuts in Lafayette would cut my
hair for free. They do that for cancer patients to give them
peace of mind over hair loss on their terms. When I went
into Great Cuts to have them shave my head, the gentleman
who took me said he had never done a head shave. This was
a first for both of us, so we comforted each other through
the process. When I got up to leave, we gave each other a big
emotional hug.
So why should I cry about this? In time, my hair will grow
back. So it’s okay, I will overcome this new bump in the road. I
have to keep telling myself, “Sit, wait, hope, and pray.” I have to
keep my mind strong to deal with all of the pain and discomfort.
PAUSING CHEMO TO DEAL WITH AN ADDITIONAL MEDICAL ISSUE
I found out that I have to have surgery for another healthrelated
issue. Sooner, rather than later. They tell me before
I can have the surgery, I have to stop chemo. Then, after the
surgery, I have to wait four to six weeks to get back on my
chemo treatment, so my recovery will be longer than first
thought. I was in pain (not related to my cancer) for nine
months before they found out what was wrong, and now the
pain has gotten worse, and it’s harder for me to use my mind
to keep the pain at bay. It takes a lot of mind power to keep
up with the pain I’m in. I just wish the doctors or hospital
had really listened to me. Maybe I wouldn’t be in so much
pain for this long.
When you’re going through medical problems, you
sometimes have to remind yourself it has to get worse
before it gets better. It’s scary when they tell you they don’t
know how bad it is and that they will probably have to do
reconstructive surgery while I’m still in the operating room.
You never know how strong you really are until you are in it!
CARING FOR MY DOGS
Last night, my friend and sister Missy said that she and
her husband will keep my babies until I can walk and bend
down. That is the biggest help to me while I recover from
surgery. It is a big deal for someone to take care of my dogs
for a long time.
RAELENE JOHNSON. CREDIT: KAREN BEEMAN
I just got back from Denver, where I went to give Missy my
babies to keep until I heal. I know she will take good care of
them. She has done it before. I feel blessed to have real friends
who will be with me through the hell yet to come to my body.
GOING FORWARD
When this is finally behind me, my life will get back to the
way it was before all of this stopped me. I know I will feel
better when this is over. Then, I have to start the chemo
treatment again. Not looking forward to doing that again,
but it is what it is.
I thank God today that I’m strong enough to get through
all of these medical issues. I believe in the power of prayer
and hope you will consider keeping me in yours. ■
COLORING PAGE BY GIGI GALEN
12 DENVER VOICE March 2024
׉	 7cassandra://98mMCaQC735QlO2SVwBCAbNeeowv21prP1ogdaszqZ0&` eҍ*D׉E EVENTS
GUIDED MEDITATION
A regular meditation practice can help you cultivate kindness and inner peace—two things we
desperately need in stressful times. Each class will include instruction on mindfulness themes,
followed by 30 minutes of practice. All are welcome!
WHEN: Mar 1, 8, 15, 22, and 29, 10 a.m. – 11 a.m.
COST: Free but registration is required.
WHERE: Online
INFO: denverlibrary.org/events
SOUTH SOUTH BROADWAY VARIETY SHOW
Every Thursday, enjoy a free night of stand-up comedy and live music down on South
Broadway.
WHEN: Mar 7, 14, 21, and 28, 8 p.m.
COST: Free
WHERE: Western Sky Bar & Taproom, 4361 S. Broadway
INFO: westernskybar.com
COLORADO DRAGON BOAT FILM FESTIVAL
Founded in 2016, this four-day festival will feature in-person film screenings, community
conversations, and special events celebrating the power of filmmaking within Asian
communities.
WHEN: Mar 14 – Mar 17
COST: Prices vary; see website for details.
WHERE: Sie FilmCenter, 2510 E. Colfax
INFO: denverfilm.org
ACROSS
Across
1. Loud
7. Annoyance
13. Apple juice brand
14. Evoking strong feeling
16. They hold your horses
17. Tackle or guard
18. Literally three
19. Give way, as to
pedestrians
TATTERED COVER WRITERS’ CLUB
Join fellow writers once a month to discuss processes, goals, publishing logistics, and
techniques. This event is held the last Monday of every month.
WHEN: Mar 25, 6 p.m.
COST: $5
WHERE: Tattered Cover, 2526 E. Colfax Ave.
INFO: tatteredcover.com
21. Smart-alecky
22. Paper covering the NYSE
23. Inc. relative
24. Game with matchsticks
25. Bucket of bolts
27. Spanish “Enough!”
29. ___ voom
30. Crew member
32. Scuffles
34. Picnic pest
35. “Who, me?”
36. South American river
in an Enya song title
40. Drooping
44. Rip apart
45. The fourth letter in
“circle,” but not the first
47. Final Four org.
48. World finance org.
49. Center X or O
50. Sixth sense, for short
51. Standard
53. Attack ad, maybe
55. Confront
56. Band follower
58. Salon treatment
60. “Evil Ways” band
61. Muffles
62. Unsaturated alcohol
(anagram of OSTLER)
63. Least ingenuous
DOWN
1. Shrinking Asian lake
2. Glass cover on a
Sylvia Plath novel
3. Response to “Shall we?”
4. Had a meal
5. One of the titular
Gilmore girls
6. Greek letter
7. Patsy Walker’s
comics alter ego
8. In the center of
9. Prince, to a king
10. Fret
11. In-between
12. Slippery
13. “Tommy” rockers
15. Colonic treatments
20. “A Nightmare on
___ Street”
26. Mind your ___ q’s
27. “Obvi!”
28. Poison plant
29. Churchill’s gesture
31. 6 on a phone
33. Saturate, in dialect
36. Rubber gaskets
37. Shark-riding fish
38. Ahead (of)
39. Breakfast staple
40. External memory
holders for digital
cameras
41. Mountain climbing tools
42. In the beginning stages
43. Rubberneckers
46. Carly ___ Jepsen
52. Setting you might turn
on and off throughout
a videoconference
53. ___-Japanese War
54. Fishing rod attachment
55. Grow dim
57. Golfer’s goal
59. Set (down)
COURTESY OF
DEBORAH LASTOWKA
PUZZLES
COURTESY OF STREETROOTS
ANSWERS ARE ON PAGE 15
NERD NITE
If you’re a fan of TED talks, the Discovery Channel, and/or Wikipedia binges, Nerd Nite is the
show for you! Three experts will present on three different topics, while the audience drinks
and thinks along the way. Be there and be square!
WHEN: Mar 29, doors at 6:30 p.m., show at 7 p.m.
COST: $10 in advance, $15 at the door
WHERE: Bug Theatre, 3654 Navajo St.
INFO: bugtheatre.org
March 2024 DENVER VOICE 13
PUZZLE COURTESY OF STREET ROOTS, DENVER VOICE’S SISTER PAPER IN PORTLAND, OR
PUZZLE COURTESY OF STREET ROOTS, DENVER VOICE’S SISTER PAPER IN PORTLAND, OR
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WE LOVE OUR DONORS! WHEN YOU SUPPORT
THE DENVER VOICE, YOU ARE HELPING SUPPORT
HUNDREDS OF HOMELESS AND IMPOVERISHED
INDIVIDUALS WHO ARE WORKING TO REALIZE
SELF-SUFFICIENCY THROUGH EARNING A
DIGNIFIED INCOME. YOUR GIFT MAKES A WORLD
OF DIFFERENCE FOR THESE INDIVIDUALS. HERE,
WE LIST THOSE WHO HAVE GIVEN $500 AND MORE
IN THE LAST YEAR. DENVERVOICE.ORG/DONATE
$10,000+
Anonymous Individual Donor
Acorn Hill Foundation Inc.
Pivotal Energy Partners USA, Inc.
Matt and Nikki Seashore
Cisco
Francis Trainer and Trainer Family
$5,000 - $9,999
Anschutz Family Foundation
Laurie Duncan and Duncan-Mcwethy Foundation
Colorado Housing and Finance Authority
Frederic K Conover Trust
The Christian Foundation
Bank of America Charitable Foundation
Sustainable Housing and Development Foundation
Envestnet
$1,000-$4,999
Meek-Cuneo Family Fund
Katherine Standiford
Jill Haug
Joshua Kauer
Walker Family Foundation
Alexander Seavall
Whole Foods Foundation
Michael Dino
Alex Salva
Signs By Tomorrow
Rose Community Foundation
Russell Peterson
Donald Weaver
Chris and Susan Pappas
Julia and David Watson
Gaspar Terrana
SEI Giving Fund
Sidney B and Caleb F Gates Fund
Megan Arellano
Lisa Wagner
Warren and Betty Kuehner
Keyrenter Property Management Denver
Mathew Rezek
The Credit Union of Colorado Foundation
Jana and Jim Cuneo
Kroger
Paul Manoogian
Lori Holland
Maggie Holben
Michael J. Fehn and Jan Monnier
Jim Ashe
Courage and Community Foundation
George Lichter Family Foundation
Elsbeth Williams
Christopher Boulanger
KO Law Firm
Graham Davis
Peter Iannuzzi
$500-$999
Margaret Ramp
John Gibson
Ruth Henderson
James and Cyndi Lesslie
Fire on the Mountain
Craig Solomon
Christopher Stewart
Sheryl Parker
Laura Saunders
Robert E and Anne T Sneed Family Foundation
Barbara and Robert Ells
Carol and Louis Irwin
Edwina Salazar
James Stegman
Jennifer Stedron
Jeremy Anderson
Stephen Saul
WalMart
Nikki Lawson
CEDS Finance
Impact Assets
Courage and Community Foundation
Louis Irwin
Mary Livernois
Mr B’s Liquor
Wines For Humanity
KL&A Engineers and Builders
14 DENVER VOICE March 2024
ABOVE THE FOLD: $5,000
• One complimentary full page ad in the newspaper ($1,000 value)
• Table of 10 and Sponsor recognition at annual Rise and Thrive Breakfast (200 attendees)
• Sponsorship recognition at our annual Pints Fighting Poverty event (200 attendees)
• Business logo highlighted on website homepage, and in the Above the Fold Sponsorship list
• Logo highlighted in our annual report, along with logo in quarterly support feature of the paper
SPONSORSHIP LEVELS
THE DENVER VOICE’S ANNUAL SPONSORSHIP SUPPORT LEVELS PROVIDE BUSINESSES LIKE YOURS THE OPPORTUNITY TO
INVEST IN WORK EMPOWERMENT, HOMELESS PREVENTION, THE CHALLENGING OF COMMUNITY PERCEPTIONS, AND TO
BE A PART OF PROVIDING OUR COMMUNITY WITH QUALITY AWARD-WINNING JOURNALISM THAT MAKES A DIFFERENCE
THROUGH OUR WRITERS AND VENDORS – AN INVALUABLE PART OF DENVER’S COMMUNITY.
YOUR INVOLVEMENT WILL HELP HIGHLIGHT THE IMPORTANCE OF TAKING POSITIVE ACTION TO COMBAT HOMELESSNESS
AND IMPOVERISHMENT. AS A SPONSOR, YOU HAVE A WAY TO REACH OUT TO THE COMMUNITY AND GIVE SOMETHING BACK
AT THE SAME TIME.
ANNUAL SPONSORSHIPS BENEFITS INCLUDE YOUR LOGO LISTED ON OUR WEBSITE HOMEPAGE, MONTHLY AD SPACE IN
OUR PAPER, AND SPECIAL EVENT PERKS FOR YOU AND YOUR EMPLOYEES ALL YEAR LONG. IT’S A GOOD DEAL FOR A GOOD
CAUSE, AND YOUR GIFT IS 100% TAX-DEDUCTIBLE!
GALLEY: $2,500
• One complimentary half page ad in the newspaper ($600 value)
• Table of 10 and Sponsor recognition at annual Rise and Thrive Breakfast (200 attendees)
• Sponsorship recognition at our annual Pints Fighting Poverty event (200 attendees)
• Business logo highlighted on website homepage, and in the Galley Sponsorship list
• Logo highlighted in our annual report, along with logo in quarterly support feature of the paper
HONOR BOX: $1,000
• Table of 10 and Sponsor recognition at annual Rise and Thrive Breakfast (200 attendees)
• Sponsorship recognition at our annual Pints Fighting Poverty event (200 attendees)
• Business logo highlighted on website homepage, and in the Honor Box Sponsorship list
• Logo highlighted in our annual report, along with logo in quarterly support feature of the paper
FLY SHEET: $500
• Two complimentary tickets to our annual Pints Fighting Poverty event ($50 value)
• Business logo highlighted on website homepage, and in the Fly Sheet Sponsorship list
• Logo highlighted in our annual report, along with logo in quarterly support feature of the paper
׉	 7cassandra://Q_2VnUq8nqsWt6iRFNSem3cThRYxmEKECnEC_l1fm9I!x` eҍ*D׉E(RESOURCE LIST
FOR HOMELESS INDIVIDUALS IN DENVER
DENVERVOICE.ORG/RESOURCE-LIST
DIAL 211 FOR A MORE COMPLETE LIST OF RESOURCES IN ENGLISH AND SPANISH. PROVIDES INFORMATION FOR FOOD, MEDICAL CARE, SENIOR SERVICES, YOUTH PROGRAMS, VETERAN
SUPPORT COUNSELING, EDUCATION, SHELTERS, SUBSTANCE ABUSE, HOLIDAY ASSISTANCE, AND MORE. EMAIL EDITOR@DENVERVOICE.ORG WITH CORRECTIONS OR ADDITIONS.
MEDICAL / MENTAL HEALTH / DENTAL SERVICES
ALANON FAMILY GROUPS: al-anon.org; Find a meeting: al-anon.org/al-anon-meetings/find-an-al-anon-meeting
ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS: aa.org; Colorado Service Centers; daccaa.org/central-office/other-central-offices
DENVER HEALTH MEDICAL CENTER: 777 Bannock St.; denverhealth.org
DETOX LOCAL: Features information including mental health and substance use resources specifically for the AAPI
(American Asian and Pacific Islander) community; detoxlocal.com
DRUG REHAB USA: Addiction hotline 888-479-0446; Organizations that take Medicaid: drugrehabus.org/rehabs/
treatment/medicaid/united-states/colorado/denver
HARM REDUCTION ACTION CENTER: 112 E. 8th Ave.; 303-572-7800; HIV/Hep C/ Gonorrhea/ Chlamydia testing
available. Services are restricted to active IV Drug Users. Offers clean syringes to active users, as well as safety
training on proper disposal of dirty syringes; M-F 9am-12pm: harmreductionactioncenter.org
INNER CITY HEALTH CENTER: 3800 York St.; Emergency walk-ins 303-296-1767; Dental 303-296-4873; M-F 8am-2pm
LIVE ANOTHER DAY: 877-596-6866; Equal access to life-saving mental health and substance abuse resources; 24/7
helpline: liveanotherday.org
LIVER HEALTH CONNECTION: 1325 S. Colorado Blvd.; Suite B302; Resources and support for those affected by Hep C.
Free Hep C testing offered; 800-522-4372, 800-359-9272; info@hepc-connection.org; viventhealth.org
NATIONAL AIDS HOTLINE: 800-342-AIDS/800-344-7432
NATIONAL SUICIDE PREVENTION LIFELINE: Text or call 988; 988lifeline.org
NATIONAL RUNAWAY SAFELINE: 800-RUNAWAY/800-786-2929; 1800runaway.org
RAPE ABUSE AND INCEST NATIONAL NETWORK: 800-656-HOPE; rainn.org
SALUD CLINIC: 6255 Quebec Pkwy, Commerce City; 303-697-2583, 970-484-0999; saludclinic.org/commerce-city
STOUT STREET CLINIC: 2130 Stout St.; 303-293-2220; Clinic Hours: 7am-4pm M/T/Th/F; 9am-6pm Wed;
coloradocoalition.org/healthcare
SUBSTANCE ABUSE REHAB GUIDE: Helpline 888-493-4670; detoxrehabs.net/states/colorado/
URBAN PEAKS REHAB: 490 Lafayette St., #104; 303-599-5131; Medication management and therapy center specializing
in opiate addiction; M, T, Th – 9am-12pm, 1 pm-4pm, W – 9am-12pm, 1 pm-7pm; urbanpeaksrehab.com
U.S. DOMESTIC VIOLENCE HOTLINE: 800-799-7233 (English and Spanish); 800-243-7889 (TDD); thehotline.org
CAREER SERVICES
BAYAUD ENTERPRISES CW-STEP: (Colorado Works - Subsidized training and employment program); 333 W. Bayaud
Ave.; 303-830-6885; Mon-Fri: 8am-4:30pm; Provides re-entry to the workforce for individuals with TANF
eligibility; info@bayaudenterprises.org
COMMUNITY TECHNOLOGY CENTER: Level 4, Denver Central Library, 14th Ave. & Broadway; 720-865-1706; M & T -
10am-8pm; Wed., Th &F - 10am-6pm; Sat. 9am-5pm & Sun. 1-5pm; FREE services include computer/internet use,
WIFI, computer classes, job search/resume classes and one-on-one tech help appointments; denverlibrary.org/ctc
THE WESTSIDE ONE-STOP CAREER CENTER: Denver Dept of Human Services, 1200 Federal Blvd.; M-F 7:30am-4:30pm;
Employment counseling, assisted job search, résumé prep, job/applicant matching, phone bank for calling employers,
access to computers, copiers, fax, etc.; careercenteroffices.com/center/231/denver-westside-workforce-center
WORKNOW: 720-389-0999; job recruitment, skills training, and job placement work-now.org
LGBTQ+ SUPPORT
THE TREVOR PROJECT: 866-488-7386: thetrevorproject.org
LGBT NATIONAL YOUTH TALKLINE: 800-246-7743: lgbthotline.org/youth-talkline
PRIDE INSTITUTE: 800-547-7433
TRUE COLORS UNITE: 212-461-4401 truecolorsunited.org
VETERANS & SENIORS
DENVER INNER CITY PARISH: 1212 Mariposa St.; 303-322-5733; VOA Dining Center for Seniors, aged 60 and older,
Wed.-Sat. 9am-12pm; Food Bank, Wed.-Fri.; Tickets at 9am, food bank open 10am-12pm; dicp.org
SENIOR SUPPORT SERVICES: 846 E. 18th Ave.; For those aged 60 or older; TV room, bus tokens, mental/physical
health outreach, 3 meals, M-F -7am-7pm; Sun. 11am-4pm; seniorsupportservices.org
VA MEDICAL CENTER: 1700 N Wheeling St.: Aurora 303-399-8020: va.gov/findlocations/facility/vha_554A5
VETERANS GUIDE: Veterans Disability Calculator veteransguide.org/va-disability-calculator
YOUTH SERVICES
SOX PLACE: 2017 Larimer St.; 303-296-3412 Daytime drop-in shelter for youth 12-30; Meals, socks, clothing bank,
personal hygiene supplies, internet access, intentional mentoring and guidance, crisis intervention, referrals to
other services. T-F - 12-4pm & Sat. 11am-2pm. Instagram: @Soxplace
THE SPOT AT URBAN PEAK: 2100 Stout St. 303-291-0442; Youth aged 15-20 in need of immediate overnight shelter
services, 303-974-2928; Drop-in hours M-F 8-11am urbanpeak.org/denver/programs-and-services/drop-in-center
SUNSHINE BEHAVIORAL HEALTH: 833-931-2484; Services for youth facing substance abuse, addiction, mental health
disorders, or a combination of these conditions; sunshinebehavioralhealth.com
TGTHR (FKA ATTENTION HOMES) Shelter: 3080 Broadway, Boulder; 303-447-1207, 303-447-1207; For ages 12-24; Offers
safe shelter, supportive programming, and other services; M-Sun, 12:30-5pm; tgthr.org
March 2024 DENVER VOICE 15
URBAN PEAK: 730 21st St., Denver; 303-974-2900; Ages14-24; Serving Denver & Colo Springs; Overnight shelter,
food, clothing, showers, case workers, job skill/straining, ID and birth certificate assistance, GED assistance,
counseling and housing; urbanpeak.org
DROP-IN & DAYTIME CENTERS
CITYSQUARE DENVER: 2575 S. Broadway; 303-783-3777;; Helps with employment, IDs, birth certs, mail services and
lockers; M-Th - 10am-2pm; citysquare.org
HAVEN OF HOPE: 1101 W. 7th Ave.; 303-607-0855; M-F - 7am-1pm; Private showers & bathrooms, laundry, lunch,
etc.; thoh.org
THE GATHERING PLACE: 1535 High St.; 303-321-4198; Daytime drop-in center for women, their children, and
transgender individuals; Meals, computer lab, phones, food bank, clothing, art programs, GED tutoring, referrals
to other services, etc.; M, W, Th, F - 8:30am-5pm, T - 8:30am-1:30pm; tgpdenver.org
HARM REDUCTION ACTION CENTER: 231 E. Colfax; 303-572-7800; Provides clean syringes, syringe disposal, harmreduction
counseling, safe materials, Hep C/HIV education, and health education classes; M-F - 9am-12pm;
harmreductionactioncenter.org
HOLY GHOST CATHOLIC CHURCH: 1900 California St.; Help with lost IDs and birth certificates; holyghostchurch.org
HOPE PROGRAM: 1555 Race St.; 303-832-3354; For men and women with HIV; M-F 8am-4pm
LAWRENCE STREET COMMUNITY CENTER: 2222 Lawrence St.; 303-294-0157; Day facility, laundry, showers, restrooms,
access to services; homelessassistance.us/li/lawrence-street-community-center
OPEN DOOR MINISTRIES: 1567 Marion St.; bathrooms, coffee/tea, snacks, resources, wifi; M-F 7a-5:30p; odmdenver.org
ST. FRANCIS CENTER: 2323 Curtis St; 303-297-1576; 6am-6pm daily; Storage for one bag (when space is available);
Satellite Clinic hours- M, T, Th. F - 7:30am-3:30pm; Wed. 12:30-4:30pm; sfcdenver.org
FREE MEALS
AGAPE CHRISTIAN CHURCH: 2501 California St., Sat., 11am
CAPITOL HEIGHTS PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH: 1100 Fillmore St., Sat. lunch at 11:30am; capitolheightspresbyterian.org
CAPITOL HILL COMMUNITY SERVICES: mealsforpoor.org
CATHEDRAL OF THE IMMACULATE CONCEPTION: 1530 Logan St.; sandwiches & coffee M-F. 8:30am; denvercathedral.org
CHRIST’S BODY MINISTRIES: 850 Lincoln; Mon. closed, Tues.-Thurs. 10am-3pm, Fri. 8am-11pm; groceries & hot meal
on Sat. at 2pm (at 16th & York); Sun. church service at 6pm, dinner at 7pm; christsbody.org
CHRIST IN THE CITY: Home-cooked meal, weekly; Lunch in the Park is on Wednesdays from 12-1 at Benedict
Fountain Park (Tremont and 22nd); christinthecity.org
CITYSQUARE DENVER: 2575 S. Broadway; 303-783-3777; Food pantry Tues. 10am-6pm; citysquare.org
CAPITOL HILL COMMUNITY SERVICES: 1820 Broadway (in front of Trinity United Methodist Church); Hot meals served
M, T, Th., F - 11:45-12:15; mealsforpoor.org
DENVER RESCUE MISSION: 1130 Park Avenue West; 303-294-0157; 3 meals 7 days/week, 5:30am, 12pm, 6pm;
denverrescuemission.org
HAVEN OF HOPE: 1101 W. 7th Ave.; 303-607-0855; M-F only: 7am-1pm. 8am breakfast, 11am lunch; havenofhope.org
FEEDING DENVER’S HUNGRY: Food service on second and fourth Thursdays; feedingdenvershungry.org/events.html
FOOD NOT BOMBS: Sun. 4 p.m.; 22nd St. Stout St (near Mercury Café); Instagram: @denverfoodnotbombs
HARE KRISHNA TEMPLE: 1400 Cherry St., free vegetarian feast on Sun., 6:45-7:30pm; krishnadenver.com
HIS LOVE FELLOWSHIP CHURCH: 910 Kalamath St.; Community dinner on Thurs., 6-6:45pm, Men’s breakfast 1st Sat. of
the month, 8-10am, Women’s breakfast 2nd Sat., 9-11am; hislovefellowship.org
HOLY GHOST CATHOLIC CHURCH: 1900 California St.; Sandwiches, M-Sat., 10-10:30am; holyghostchurch.org
JORDAN AME CHURCH: 29th and Milwaukee St.; Tues. lunch 11:30am-1:00pm; jordanamedenver.churchfoyer.com
OPEN DOOR MINISTRIES: 1567 Marion St.; 303-830-2201; Sat. morning breakfast: 8am, Sun. dinner (required church
attendance at 4:30pm); meal served at 6pm; odmdenver.org/home
ST. CLARE’S MINISTRY AT ST. PETER AND ST. MARY: 126 W. 2nd Ave.; 303-722-8781 Dinner at 4pm on Tues; Also offers a
change of clothes, toiletries and sleeping bags when available; stpeterandmary.org
ST. ELIZABETH’S: Speer Blvd. & Arapahoe St. (Auraria Campus), 11am 7 days/week; food/coffee; stelizabethdenver.org
ST. FRANCIS CENTER: 2323 Curtis St., Wed. & Fri. 3-4:30pm (except third Wed. of each month); sfcdenver.org
ST. PAUL’S LUTHERAN: 1600 Grant St., Street Reach meal Mon. 1-4:30pm; Grocery room open at 11:30am every Mon.;
saintpauldenver.com
SAME CAFÉ: 2023 E. Colfax Ave; 720-530-6853;Restaurant serving mostly organic food—not free, but pay what you
can or work off your meal in the kitchen; Open Mon.-Sat., 11am to 2pm, Closed Sun. & holidays; soallmayeat.org
URBAN OUTREACH DENVER: 608 26th St., Thurs dinners, 6pm-7pm; lovedenver.org
VOLUNTEERS OF AMERICA: 2877 Lawrence St.; breakfast (8am), lunch (11:30am), dinner (5pm) Mon.-Thurs., 12pm on
Fri., 1pm on Sun.; food & clothing bank 9:30am-4pm Mon.-Thurs.; voacolorado.org/gethelp-denvermetrofoodnutrition-themission
DON’T
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PUZZLES ARE ON PAGE 13
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